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Agricultural Biotechnology for Africa. African Scientists and Farmers Must Feed Their Own People

Jesse Machuka
Jesse Machuka
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Published May 2001. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.126.1.16

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    Fig. 1.

    Podborer larvae infest legume pods. Inset, Podborer larva on cowpea callus in bioassay to test efficacy of cowpea pest resistance characters.

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    Fig. 2.

    The bottom up approach: Farmers and scientists discuss “crazy top” disease (inset) in maize caused by the downy mildew pathogen Peronosclerospora sorghi in Ogbomoso, southwestern Nigeria.

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Agricultural Biotechnology for Africa. African Scientists and Farmers Must Feed Their Own People
Jesse Machuka
Plant Physiology May 2001, 126 (1) 16-19; DOI: 10.1104/pp.126.1.16

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Agricultural Biotechnology for Africa. African Scientists and Farmers Must Feed Their Own People
Jesse Machuka
Plant Physiology May 2001, 126 (1) 16-19; DOI: 10.1104/pp.126.1.16
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Plant Physiology: 126 (1)
Plant Physiology
Vol. 126, Issue 1
May 2001
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More in this TOC Section

  • 1955: Kinetin Arrives. The 50th Anniversary of a New Plant Hormone
  • Transformation of Plant Science in Our Time—the Contribution of Jozef S. Schell (1935–2003)
  • Achieving the in Silico Plant. Systems Biology and the Future of Plant Biological Research
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